Photos by famed war photographer and Magnum co-founder George Rodger on view in Dubai - In Pictures


  • In 1957, British photojournalist George Rodger and his wife Jinx embarked on a Trans-Sahara Expedition for National Geographic Magazine and other publications. Photo: George Rodger
    In 1957, British photojournalist George Rodger and his wife Jinx embarked on a Trans-Sahara Expedition for National Geographic Magazine and other publications. Photo: George Rodger
  • Skeins of cotton hanging to dry in dyers souk, Tunis, Tunisia, 1958. Photo: George Rodger
    Skeins of cotton hanging to dry in dyers souk, Tunis, Tunisia, 1958. Photo: George Rodger
  • British Army personnel on leave in Cairo visit the pyramids at Giza, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
    British Army personnel on leave in Cairo visit the pyramids at Giza, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
  • Soldiers from the desert patrol on their camels about 100 km from Amman, Transjordan, Fort Mafrak, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
    Soldiers from the desert patrol on their camels about 100 km from Amman, Transjordan, Fort Mafrak, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
  • His Hashemite Highness Emir Adbullah ibn Hussein of Jordan, later to become King, Jordan, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
    His Hashemite Highness Emir Adbullah ibn Hussein of Jordan, later to become King, Jordan, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
  • Soldiers of the Arab Legion, Transjordan, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
    Soldiers of the Arab Legion, Transjordan, 1941. Photo: George Rodger
  • Desert Patrol on manoeuvres in the desert at Al-Mafraq. The Camel Corps were the original "Glubb's Girls". Recruited from Bedouin Arabs, they wore their hair in long ringlets, wore long-skirted robes and darkened their eyes with khol, 1952. Photo: George Rodger
    Desert Patrol on manoeuvres in the desert at Al-Mafraq. The Camel Corps were the original "Glubb's Girls". Recruited from Bedouin Arabs, they wore their hair in long ringlets, wore long-skirted robes and darkened their eyes with khol, 1952. Photo: George Rodger